Nigeria Police Drive Excellence With Fitness, Gallantry

The Nigeria Police Force,in a bold move towards enhancing professionalism and effectiveness within its ranks, has recently issued a directive from its headquarters to prioritise fitness and gallantry among its officers.

This significant decision, driven by the Inspector General of police IGP Kayode Egbetokun, showcases a strong commitment towards creating a renowned police force capable of maintaining law and order while ensuring the safety and well-being of the Nigerian population.

According to the spokesperson in zone 13 Anambra State, SP Ihunwo Josephine, enhancing professionalism in the police force, by focusing on fitness, the Nigeria Police Force aims to improve the overall professionalism and efficiency of its officers.

Constant physical training will not only raise the bar for individual performance but also contribute to increasing the overall capabilities of the force,she said in a statement.

This step ensures that officers are prepared physically and mentally to face the various challenges that come with protecting the populace.

According to her,maintaining public trust and a fit and gallant police force cultivates a sense of trust and confidence among the public.

This directive from the Inspector General of Police sends a clear message that the Nigeria Police Force is committed to fostering a positive relationship with the community by maintaining a high standard of physical fitness.

She quoted that,when citizens observe officers who are physically fit, they feel reassured and are more likely to cooperate and support them, improving overall policing efforts.

She added that enhanced operational readiness Physical fitness plays a crucial role in enabling officers to respond promptly and effectively to emergencies.

This directive significantly improves operational readiness, as fit officers will be better equipped to handle various situations, ensuring the safety of both themselves and citizens.

By being physically prepared, officers can handle their duties more efficiently, respond quickly to emergencies, and reduce the risk of injury during critical incidents, she said.

Positive health outcomes Promoting fitness within the Nigeria Police Force also serves to improve the overall health and well-being of its officers,the statement said.

According to the statement,regular exercise not only strengthens the body but also positively impacts mental health, resulting in improved focus, resilience, and stress management.

It added that,by fostering a culture of fitness, the force demonstrates its commitment to the holistic well-being of its personnel, ensuring they are better equipped to face the challenges of their demanding profession.

Setting a precedent for excellence the directive to keep officers fit and gallant establishes a precedent for excellence within the Nigeria Police Force. By prioritizing fitness as a crucial aspect of policing, the force becomes a trendsetter, setting an example for other law enforcement agencies to follow.

The emphasis on maintaining a fit and gallant force encourages officers to consistently strive for excellence, ensuring a higher standard of performance across the board.

The Nigeria Police Force’s recent decision to prioritise fitness and gallantry among its officers demonstrates a progressive approach towards enhancing professionalism, operational readiness, public trust, and officer well-being.

By emphasising the importance of fitness, the force aims to set a precedent for excellence and further strengthen its effectiveness in maintaining law and order.

With this visionary directive from the Inspector General of Police, the Nigeria Police Force is poised to elevate its stature and become a symbol of pride and security for the Nigerian citizens.

Ondo: Court Jails Man, 30, For Raping Two-Year-Old Baby

Babatunde Solanke

A 30-year-old man, Peter Ude, has been sentenced to two years imprisonment for defiling a two-year-old toddler.

He was arrested by the police on July 14, 2024 at Dele Ojo Camp at Uso, Owo Local Government Area when he raped a two-year-old toddler around 10:00pm.

The charge No: FAK/30c/24, reads that Peter Ude “did unlawfully bring out your penis and lying on one(names withheld) ‘f’ aged 2 years and discharged sperm on her vaginal and thereby committed an offence contrary and punishable under Section 4(2) of Ondo State Violence Against Person(Prohibition) Law 2021.”

When the charges were to him at the Family Magistrate Court sitting at Uso, Peter Ude pleased guilty to the charges.

The presiding judge, Chief Magistrate T.G. Alphonso, having examined the medical report extracted by the Investigative Police Officer, Olayinka and presented before the court by the prosecution, Supol Martins Olowofeso, pronounced the accused guilty and, therefore sentenced him to two calendar years with 2 days lashes.

The convict was sent to Olokuta correctional centre in Akure, Ondo State.

How Continuous Hike In Monetary Policy Rate Will Collapse Manufacturing Sector-MAN

Mohammed Shosanya

The Manufacturers Association of Nigeria, MAN, has expressed disgust over the continuous increase in the country’s Monetary Policy Rate, saying the development will collapse manufacturing sector.

Segun Ajayi-Kadir,Director General of MAN,in a statement on Wednesday,said the development will escalate production costs and consequently the prices of finished goods, with consequential effect on unemployment and social instability. It will further compound the prevailing low consumer demand, capacity utilization and profitability.

According to him,it will stifle capacity to make new and further investments, innovation and curtail opportunities for the growth.

He said,the development will constrained the capacity of the sector to compete effectively in regional and global markets, and if unchecked, may trigger critical distress of more manufacturing concerns.

He also said the hike in interest rate,will constrain reinvestment for expansion and introduction of new brands, as significant portion of revenue of manufacturing concerns is directed towards interest payments.

It will further restrain access to capital, judging from the fact that only 16% of total commercial bank credit was disbursed to the manufacturing sector in the first quarter of the year.

He said,it will reduce the flow of investments into the sector and funds required for retooling, upgrading facilities and procurement of new technologies.

“It is noteworthy to state that the worrisome trend occasioned by increase in cost of borrowing is corroborated by the report of NBS, to the effect that manufacturing investment declined significantly in the second quarter of the year.

“This drop underscores the critical link between domestic investment confidence and foreign investor sentiment. In addition, the share of manufactured exports in non-oil exports also declined from 21.4% in Q4 2023 to 15.1% in Q1 2024”

How To Reposition Capital Market – SEC

Mohammed Shosanya

The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) says the resolution of identity management issues would help reposition the Nigerian capital market for greater potential.

The Director General of the SEC Dr. Emomotimi Agama,who stated this at a Workshop on Identity Management for the Capital Market held in Lagos, Wednesday, said the identity management system currently being developed by the market will tackle the lingering identification issues.

Dr. Agama emphasised that identity management issues when solved will provide lasting solution to the issue of unclaimed dividends, reduce the barriers of entry to the market and make the market more attractive to the youth segment whose participation is currently very low.

The SEC DG stated that the aim of workshop is to bring together stakeholders and industry players to discuss and seeks ways of addressing the lingering issue of identity management in the capital market.

These issues he said,have plagued the market for a while, contributed to the increasing quantum of unclaimed dividends which seem to have defied all efforts to stem over time, and negatively affected the attraction and competitiveness of the market.

He said “In view of the promise to stem this undesirable trend going forward, the Commission is very passionate about this initiative because its success would portend great potentials for our market.

“This journey began in the year 2018, following discussions at the 3rd Capital Market Committee (CMC) meeting of the year, on the need to address legacy identity management issues in the market. The Securities and Exchange Commission, therefore in January 2019, set up an in-house committee on the subject. The Committee was tasked with identifying issues surrounding identity management in the market, engaging with relevant stakeholders to document and proffer solutions, and make recommendations to management.

Agama said that in a report submitted by the in-house Committee to Management, it stressed the need to consolidate investors’ data and seek ways and means to finding a lasting solution to this monster plaguing the market.

Following the recommendations of the Committee, the SEC DG said the Commission, in 2021, dissolved the in-house Committee and set up a market-wide and bigger Committee, to undertake a more intensive study of the depth of the Nigerian identity crisis , and more specifically, in the capital market and articulate actionable and measurable solutions to the lingering issues: harmonise the various databases of investors in the capital market with a view to engendering data accuracy, and addressing the absence of a central repository of investors’ data for the entire spectrum of the Nigerian capital market.

According to him , “The Committee, graciously chaired by Mr. Aigboje Aig-Imoukhuede, has its membership drawn from leading market players and institutions across the Nigerian capital market ecosystem, including the chief executive officers of Nigerian Inter-Bank Settlement System (NIBSS) Plc and the National Identity Management Commission (NIMC).

“In the course of its work, the Committee engaged the services of Ernst and Young (EY) as consultants to assess the current state of the capital market identity management system, undertake a cross-jurisdictional peer review and develop a future-state identity management framework for the Nigerian Capital Market. Here at the workshop today, EY would be providing insights into the research undertaken on our market vis-à-vis other jurisdictions and proffer solutions to our identity management challenges.

He stated that the postulations and recommendations of EY shall be the subject of deliberation for all stakeholders at the workshop which is hoped to assist in proffering a lasting solution.

In his remarks, Chairman of the Committee, Mr. Aigboje Aig-Imoukhuede said the work of the committee will assist capital market operators elevate their performances and commended the SEC for its suppose to the committee.

Saraki: Kwara’s Iroko Tree

By Akinremi Olaolu

Every period in the history of mankind,God throws up a leader among the people. The chosen one is always made to suit the purpose at hand and to lead the people out of a particular crisis.

The crisis at hand in Nigeria now is multi-dimensional. It has socio-political, economic, and moral sides. Therefore, what is needed is a leader with the right knowledge, experience,connections,temperament, vision,determination,and programme to lead in harnessing and distributing state resources for the overall benefit of the people.

With the way things are going in our country, it is obvious that to develop Nigeria, each of the sub-national entities must work to bring development to their area. They must put their best brains and hands to work such that each of them becomes a development centre and good news must be simultaneously coming from every state in terms of improvement in the lives of the people.

Back home in Kwara State, it is obvious that the government in place is not doing well at all. It is not only bereft of ideas as to how to identify the resources of the state, harness them for general purpose, and redistribute them to make the overwhelming majority of the people happy and prosperous.

Yet,we are stuck with that government for the next 34 months when their mandate will expire. The current government in Kwara State under the leadership of Abdulrahman Abdulrazaq has demonstrated that it has no clue about how to use state resources for general development. Rather, it has been a government run on impulse.

Projects are haphazardly conceived and implemented. Individual benefits are placed over the general goal. That is why the government still appears directionless after five years in office. No project of great value has been commissioned. No policy has been unfolded and no life-changing programme is ongoing.

This takes me back to the issue of leadership. Dr. Abubakar Bukola Saraki, the Waziri of Ilorin represents many things to many people. While a lot of people see his many good sides, others do not see anything good in him. He is constitutionally barred from being governor of Kwara State, having served in that capacity, producing great results between 2003 and 2011.

He cannot even run for any office in the state having been elected Senator twice from the state and moved on to become President of the country’s highest law-making body, the Senate.

However, at every turn, events have proved without any iota of doubt that he is the best Nigerian to have ever been produced by Kwara State in particular and the North Central zone in general. Apart from being the highest national office holder ever produced by Kwara State, the recent events following the death of his mother, Chief (Mrs) Florence Morenike Saraki on June 18, 2024, have proved that Saraki is the Iroko tree under whom all Kwarans can find shade.

Between June 18th when the announcement of the transition of Mama Saraki was announced and July 19th when her remains were interred,the entire nation, irrespective of tribe, religion, political party, and socio-economic status rose as one entity to support Saraki in celebrating the life and times of his late mum.

The Ikoyi home of Saraki’s mother as well as his own homes in Lagos and Abuja became rallying points. The high and the low, Christians and Muslims, old and young, from the north and south, the highly educated and the barely educated ones, the people living with disabilities and the very fit ones, all came to commiserate with Saraki.

The President of the country, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu issued a press statement and also directed his wife and Nigeria’s First Lady, Sen. Oluremi Tinubu, to pay a condolence visit. Leaders from other African countries, diplomats, and other foreign dignitaries all visited the former Senate President, a man who in more than five years has not occupied any public office.

All these show the reach,influence, and national /international network that Saraki has. He is in a class of his own. The mother’s funeral was a class act. The lesson for us Kwarans in the before, during, and after events of the funeral is that Saraki is the undisputed national leader that God has selected for Kwara as of today. He has no match.

Whether anybody likes him or hates him, any Kwaran who has the interest of the state at heart and is motivated by the development and welfare of the state, that person has no option but to cooperate with Saraki and work with him to place Kwara State on the national map as one of the places where good news is often breaking.

Saraki has demonstrated that he knows the people, the how, and the when to network for more national and international benefits to come to Kwara State. We have to change the current narrative where in five years and with hundreds of millions of naira down the rain, no single foreign investment has come to Kwara State. Yet, the administration spends more money to antagonize Saraki.

With such a situation,how can the youths get jobs, how are we going to break the poverty circle and from where do we begin the lobby for investors to find our state attractive to put their money?

As it is,if there is any grievance or disagreement between any Kwaran and Saraki,let it be settled. Let there be forgiveness and reconciliation across the lines. Kwara State has nobody as big, well-connected, and reliable as Saraki. He is the big tree that can provide the much-needed shelter for us in the state.

He only needs our cooperation, support, and prayers to deliver.There is nowhere in the world where people are blessed with such a huge talent, shining star, and focused leader, and yet he is discarded and made to waste away on the narrow calculation of envy and dislike. If you ask a good majority of those opposed to Saraki’s leadership and who do not like him, their reason will be principally based on the talk of: Is he the only one? How can one person be the one who gets most of the top slots?

Now, that envy propelled the O to Ge campaign. It has made all of us vote for another political platform other than the one led by Saraki without weighing the options and critically examining what we are being presented as a replacement.

Now, we have experienced the other side and like the woman who just wants to change spouse to know what it looks like to be with another man, we are stuck with those who specialize in deceit and have no ideas as to what to do to better the lives of the people.

A word is enough for the wise. Let us co-operate with the one God has chosen for us. Let us seek to march with Saraki to build a new Kwara where all hands are on deck to rebuild, refocus, redevelop, and reposition the state.

Olaolu writes from Offa, Kwara State

Use Subsidy Savings To Upgrade Electricity Network, MAN Advises FG

Mohammed Shosanya

The Manufacturers Association of Nigeria,MAN,has advised the Federal Government to utilize subsidy savings to improve patronage of made in Nigeria products and upgrade electricity, road and rail networks within industrial hubs.

Segun Ajayi-Kadir,Director General of MAN,said this in a statement in reaction to the new hike in interest rate announced by the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN),on Tuesday.

He also emphasized the need for the government to encourage nationwide investments in renewable energy sources to alleviate energy cost and enhance competitiveness.

He advised the government to take deliberate actions to insulate the productive sector from the impact of continuous hike in MPR by expediting action on the disbursement of special provisions earmarked by government for the manufacturing sector.

He added:”The N75billion single digit loan approved by President Bola Tinubu, GCFR over a year ago and the recently announced N1trillion readily comes to mind”.

According to him,government should offer fiscal support system that will enable the manufacturing sector import raw materials, spares and machines that are not available locally at concessionary duty rate.

Government,he said,should minimize pressure on foreign exchange reserves by incentivize backward integration and local sourcing to decrease reliance on imported products and raw materials.

It should enforce Executive Order 003 to enhance support for local industries and ramp-up domestic production by restricting access to forex for the importation of products manufactured locally.

He added that government should also address the issue of low manufacturing productivity and food production occasioned by the high-level of insecurity across the country to curb the persistent rise in inflation.

He further advised the government to direct the CBN to conduct a comprehensive assessment of the impact of previous decisions of the MPC on inflation rate and the productive sector over the last 5 years.

This,he said,will provide information that will guide future MPC decisions.

He urged the government to direct the CBN to collaborate with the Ministry of Finance to facilitate stronger handshake and coherence between monetary and fiscal policies.

He implored the apex bank to be domestic production centric by taking a detour from continuous hike in MPR and allow time for the real sector to recover from the impact of previous hikes.

He expressed concern that, despite the continuous increase in MPR over the past two years resulting in a weighty 1,475 basis point hike from 11.5% in May 2022 to 26.25% in May 2024, inflation has remained persistently high, reaching a staggering 34.19% in June, the highest since March 1996.

He said:”Clearly, the new rate will further constrain the growth of the manufacturing sector, as the purchasing power of consumers, production levels, competitiveness and sales will face further decline”.

CBN’s New Interest Rate Tolerable-Muda Yusuf

Mohammed Shosanya

An economist and Chief Executive Officer,Centre for the Promotion of Private Enterprise, Dr Muda Yusuf, has said that the Central Bank of Nigeria is now moderate in it’s monetary tightening stance following July increase in interest rate .

The Monetary Policy Committee of the apex bank, had Tuesday announced increase in interest rate by 50 basis points.

Yusuf, in a statement, said the development,is perhaps a reflection of some responsiveness to the clamour by stakeholders in the real economy for the apex bank to effect a deceleration in its rate hikes.

He added:”Although my preference was for a pause on the rate increases because of the enormity of the headwinds that businesses are grappling with. But the marginal increase marks a softening of the tightening stance. It is tolerable’.

He emphasized the need for the country to now accelerate the implementation of the fiscal policy measures to tackle inflation.

Already the economic Stabilisation plan contains a number of laudable fiscal policy measures that could reduce production costs in the economy, he noted

He said:”It is also important and urgent for the government to adopt and quickly implement the recommendation of the Presidential Committee on Fiscal and Tax Reforms on the Customs duty exchange rate which proposed N800/dollar. The adoption of this recommendation would have a considerable impact on cost of goods and services in the country”.

How Kidnappers Captured Us,Released Corp Members Narrate

Four youth Corps members serving in the South Eastern and a young cabinet maker, who were kidnapped by gunmen along Benin/Ifon road, have been released to their family members by their abductors on Monday after spending four days in kidnappers’ den.

Narrating their ordeals, one of the victims, Patience Andrew said: “We boarded a bus from Abia State to Onitsha, but our driver was not fast enough. We got there around 2pm.

“We boarded another bus going to Akure, but the driver did not take off immediately, so we left Onitsha park around 5pm with 9 passengers in a Siena bus.

“We got to Ondo State around 10pm when the incident happened. They flashed torch light on the driver and the driver said: “Oga I no see you.

“They fired him twice the moment he made that statement and the woman sitting next to him. One guy was butchered. So, two people died and we don’t know about the guy that was butchered, he ran away.

“Then they brought us out of the vehicle and they took us to the bush. We trekked from past 10pm till around 7am the following day in the bush.

“The kidnappers were five in number and their age range should be around 25 years and not up to 30 years. They were speaking Hausa/Fulani language and they have one interpreter.

“They tortured us and we were only given garri and water. At first, they asked for N30 million per person, but as the negotiation was going they brought it down to N3 million.

“So, they now asked us to bring N1 million each. We slept inside the bush throughout the day, we heard the barking of a dog and sound of cow in the bush and we pass through farmland when we were coming out.

“But we didn’t meet anybody on the road, then our brothers came with what they asked for which are 3 Hollandia yoghurt, 2 loaves of bread, one carton of peak milk, one pack of malt drink, 5 bottles of Fearless drink, one pack of YES cigarette and 10 packs of rice and chicken and N1 million each, which totalled N5 million.”

One of the two family members, who took the N5million ransom to the abductors, Oluwadara Olamide, disclosed that “after we agreed on N5 million in total, they gave me a location and told me to be there before 10am.

“Then I gathered the money and we got to Owo at 9:30am. Then they told me to stop at the double lane that entered Owo town, then I was trying their number till 11am.

“When I was able to call them, then they called me back after 15 minutes. Then they asked me to take a transport from that junction to Mobil. So, I called them after getting to Mobil, then they asked me to take two motorbikes one for me and the other to carry the stuffs we bought for them.

“Then they told us to go to Achiever University road at Ago Alhaji, and then warned us that “if you bring wahala, wahala plenty.” We told the bikemen that we are going for excursion, then when we got to Ago Alhaji, they told us to go to Ago Pan. When we got to Ago Pan, we called them, and a young guy came to meet us with gun and told us where to pass.

“We got into the bush and I showed them the bag where the cash was and they carried it and they asked me to move, and not quite long, we stopped and they called their other member to bring our family members.”

The victims said: “We were treated in Owo Police Area Command clinic and put down our statements,” Patience Andrew said.

According to the victims, they were released on Idase/Ute Road, Owo, Ondo State, having trekked through the forest from the point they were abducted to Idase forest.

The kidnap victims are Adewole Paul Oluwaseun, Oluwadara Feranmi, Andrew Patience, Oribamise Taiwo, all female Youth Corps members and Ajayi Lekan(cabinet maker.)

Citizenship,Protests And The Law

By Ebun-Olu Adegboruwa, SAN

After the right to life, the next important right for every individual is the right to freedom of speech, by which all men and women are conferred with the inalienable right to express themselves freely.

In Genesis Chapter 4, God punished Cain for killing his brother Abel without a lawful cause. Even in his state of condemnation, Cain protested the punishment as being too harsh. Genesis 4:13: “And Cain said to the Lord, ‘My punishment is greater than I can bear!

Surely You have driven me out this day from the face of the ground; I shall be a fugitive and a vagabond on the earth and it will happen that anyone who finds me will kill me. And the Lord said to him, ‘Therefore, whoever kills Cain, vengeance shall be taken on him sevenfold. And the Lord set a mark on Cain, lest anyone finding him should kill him.”

The right to protest is intrinsic to every citizen and it is divinely recognized and ordained by God. It was once part of the custom of Israel that female children were not entitled to inherit the assets of their father upon his death. This custom stood sacrosanct for a long time until it came to the turn of certain brave women.

Zelophehad was a very wealthy man who had five daughters and had no male child. After his death, his five daughters approached Moses in Numbers 27, to protest against the law of God which discriminated against them in favour of their male counterparts. They stood boldly before the priests and the elders of the land to demand for their rights.

This was strange to Moses for anyone to seek to overturn the custom but he was brave enough to take their protest directly to God.

God sanctioned their protest and thereafter changed the existing law to sanction female inheritance. God ordained the right to freedom from discrimination based on the protest of some courageous women. The law against discrimination has thereafter found itself in various statutes, especially section 42 of the 1999 Constitution.

In modern day Nigeria however, and in 2024, we are being told that the right to protest is a crime. Beyond any doubt, section 39 (1) of the Constitution of Nigeria supports the freedom of expression when it states that ‘every person shall be entitled to freedom of expression, including freedom to hold opinions and to receive and impart ideas and information without interference’.

According to Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary, a protest is ‘a solemn declaration of opinion and usually of dissent, the act of objecting or a gesture of disapproval, a complaint, objection, or display of unwillingness usually to an idea or a course of action, to make a protestation’.

Some Nigerians have declared their intention to stage protests across the nation to express their grievances and disagreement with the economic policies of the administration of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu which they claimed to have imposed suffering, hunger and poverty on the masses of the people.

Government on the other hand has become unnecessarily jittery of the likely outcome of such protests, citing the case of the #EndSARS protests of 2020. It is interesting to note that a government led by President Tinubu cannot stand protests. What exactly is the government’s opposition to peoples’ gathering?

The Take It Back Movement, led by Comrade Omoyele Sowore, is part of the leaders of the proposed August Protest. That is a known entity, who will work along with other civil society organisations to co-ordinate the protests.

Earlier this year, there were spontaneous protests in Oyo, Osun, Edo and Kano States fueled by the cruel neo-liberal economic policies of the Tinubu administration.

No one could identify the leaders of those protests but here we have known individuals who have put forth their names and reputation to lead the protest and the government is not satisfied with that? Let me draw the attention of the President to the provisions of several statutes in Nigeria that sanction the right of citizens to protest.

Under and by virtue of Section 40 of the 1999 Constitution, ‘every person shall be entitled to assemble freely and associate with other persons’. Section 41 of the same Constitution grants the freedom of free movement to all citizens.

But more importantly, the Police Act 2020, has specifically imposed a sacred obligation on the government not only to allow civil protests but also to provide security for the protection of protesters. Section 83 of the Police Act provides as follows:

“83 (1) The Police Force is responsible for maintaining and securing public safety and public order.
(2) The Police Force shall, in carrying out its responsibilities under subsection (1):
(a) uphold the provisions of the Constitution and other laws;
(b) uphold and protect the fundamental rights of all persons in Nigeria, and

(c ) be fair to all persons in Nigeria notwithstanding their economic status or religious, ethnic or political beliefs and affiliations.

(4) Where a person or organization notifies the police of his or its intention to hold a public meeting, rally or procession on a public highway, or such meetings in a place where the public has access to, the police officer responsible for the area where the meeting, rally or procession will take place, shall mobilize personnel to provide security cover for the meeting, rally or procession.”

The above provisions are clear and unambiguous, carrying with it several legal implications. First is that the law recognizes the right of citizens to hold a public meeting, rally or procession along the highway or any other place that the general public has access to, such as Gani Fawehinmi Park in Lagos, the Unity Fountain in Abuja and other locations across Nigeria.

The second implication of section 83 above is the binding obligation imposed upon the Police Force to provide security for such public meeting, rally or procession.

When politicians gather to hold their primary elections in public places, the government grants them protection through massive deployment of security. That being the case, members of the public also have the right to demand for and be granted police protection for their public meetings, rallies and processions.

Where the government is opposed to any civil protest, it is indirectly stating that it has no capacity to comply with the provisions of the law, which is an impeachable offence, for any government to outlaw the right of citizens to protest.

It was the protest of Jewish women against the German pogrom that led to the United Nations Charter. That Charter is replete with several declarations of the rights of citizens to express and channel their grievances to the highest authority in the land. Ditto for the African Charter on Human and Peoples Rights.

The Catholic Church used to be the only Christian organization in the whole world. It was the protest of some of their members that led to the establishment of other denominations.

It was the constant and relentless protests of our forefathers that led to the independence of Nigeria from the British colonialists. Pray, if Nigeria itself is a child of protest, how can anyone wake up in 2024 to prevent Nigerians from protesting? It just will not work.

I appreciate the legitimate concerns expressed as to the possibility of the protest being hijacked by unscrupulous persons. From my own personal experience, the intention of protesters is always to achieve a peaceful and violence-free gathering but along the line, and because the government is usually uncomfortable with such protests, hoodlums are sponsored to invade the gathering.

In some cases, the government sponsors rival groups to counter the protests or in very desperate situations, the government will organize the hoodlums to scatter the protest. In one of such protests that I was part of, we summoned courage to confront the hoodlums since we had a large crowd with us.

They took to their heels upon sensing our collective determination to resist them, but we were able to apprehend some of them who were not so fast in their paces. Upon interrogation, it turned out that they were directly recruited by operatives of the secret service, working directly for the state.

What the government should do in this case is to open the avenue for dialogue with the organizers of the proposed August Protest, to discuss the modalities of their outing and how to provide adequate security.

On the part of the organizers of the protest, there is need for thorough re-appraisal of the proposed protest. Why call it A Day of Rage? The theme alone is suggestive of an intention to cause havoc and mayhem.

If the purpose is to draw attention to the dire consequences of the economic policies of the government, then the protesters should do their best not to constitute themselves into any gathering that will hurt the same economy.

Relating with the mass destruction of public infrastructures that followed the hijack of the #EndSARS protests, it is expected that the government will be concerned with any gathering that is actuated by and meant to vent rage.

Let me speak to President Tinubu on the point of the right of citizens to protest. Against the clear provisions of sections 8 and 9 of the Constitution, the government of Lagos State under his tenure as governor, created Local Council Development Areas. It was a legitimate protest by the then Governor Tinubu against the lopsidedness of the touted Federation.

President Tinubu protested against the leadership style of Afenifere and later founded the Action Congress, fashioned after the ideals and philosophies of the Action Group of Chief Obafemi Awolowo.

In 2012, President Tinubu then as part of the opposition group held the federal government to ransom through public protests that lasted for days, in resistance to the proposal by the government of Dr. Goodluck Jonathan to remove fuel subsidy.

In 2023, President Tinubu then as a presidential aspirant of his party, furiously protested the attempt to sideline him through his famous Emilokan Declaration in Abeokuta, openly chastising then President Muhammadu Buhari whom he termed as a weeping President.

That act of courage took him to Aso Villa where he sits today to preside over the affairs of Nigeria. The heavens did not fall then and there is no reason for the same President Tinubu to threaten fire and brimstone now.

We cannot have a country where leaders lord it over the people all the time, to the extent of becoming intolerant of common civil protests. You cannot beat a child and at the same time ask him not to cry.

In our case, President Tinubu is beating Nigerians with his wobbling economic policies which have imposed mass hunger, poverty and suffering on the people. Yet, the President does not want them to cry.

Let the protests hold, let the government sit with the protesters and agree on modalities, let the protesters go back to the drawing board to retool the theme of the protests and by that allow our constitutional democracy a chance to grow. In the words of the President, ‘Let the People Breathe’!

Don’t Protest,Tinubu Begs Nigerians

Mohammed Shosanya

President Bola Tinubu,has begged Nigerians planning to stage a protest over perceived hardship in the country, saying it was unnecessary at this time.

He spoke through his Minister of Information and National Orientation, Mohammed Idris, assuring them, especially the youth that he was in tune with their cries and worries and would do anything to bring succour to them.

He spoke during a routine meeting with some of the cabinet members, which Idris was in attendance.

The Minister said, “We discussed the issue of the country generally and Mr President has asked me to again inform Nigerians that he listens to them especially the young people that are trying to protest.

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“Mr President listens to them, he takes what they say seriously and he is working assiduously to ensure that this country is good not just for today but also for the future.

“On the issue of the planned protest ,Mr President does not see any need for that, he asked them to shelve that plan and he has asked them to await government’s response to all their pleas ,he listens to them like I said. A lot is happening, only today the National Assembly has expediously passed the bill on National Minimum Wage.

“You can see how the President is working, it was transmitted only yesterday, today it has been passed a lot of other interventions that the President has also put in place are also going to be looked at expediously in the interest of Nigerians so there is no need for strike, the young people out there should listen to the President and allow the President more time to see to the realization of all the goodies he has for them”.

Idris explained that growing concerns from Nigerians necessitated the Federal Government approval of grains and rice for state governments which was delivered to them expediously.

He said, “It is just the necessary first step, government is going to continue in that direction supporting them and assuring that whatever intervention the Federal Government has put in place will go to those that should benefit.

“The Federal Government is looking at strategies that every intervention would go directly to to those who benefit from those interventions not middle men intervention along the way.

“You heard about the student loan board launched by Mr President, Mr President is very passionate about that deepening that everyone that should go to work will have the opportunity to go to school. It is no longer a time for all of us to stay back and see our young able bodied men and women having passed the examinations to go to tertiary institutions”.